Electric struggles for towing simply because batteries have very little energy in comparison to liquid fuels. A gallon of gas is about 32kwh of battery. So a 100kwh pack is equal to only 3 gallons of gas as far as energy. Luckily electric is about 3x as efficient so for range it’s equal to about 9 gallons of gas.Still no place to charge an ev around me so outside of a few cities and towns its a non-starter. I also seriously question how anything electric handles towing. Understand this is a hybrid, just need to understand the actual real-life implications of having a dead battery, a big boat in tow, and a 200 mile drive home that doesnt pass a charging station.
Hey, a fellow Utahan that also thinks Dodges suck? I think you and I are alone on that in this State.Friends don’t let friends buy Stellantis products.
If I made a list of reputable auto manufacturers who have consistently come out with innovations that have panned out, Stellantis wouldn’t make the list. They need to get their current issues and “innovations” figured out before doing anything new.
That said, the concept is cool. I would take an HD pickup from a reputable manufacturer with this tech if it was executed correctly (6.7 power stroke King Ranch with hybrid tech sounds pretty sweet). There’s just no way that Stellantis will execute it correctly based on their track record.
Diesel electric trains work the same way as this vehicle is intended to work. Run a generator at its most efficient rpm. To power a motor that charges a battery and runs an electric motor. Most trains use this means of power. So do older submarines.Still no place to charge an ev around me so outside of a few cities and towns its a non-starter. I also seriously question how anything electric handles towing. Understand this is a hybrid, just need to understand the actual real-life implications of having a dead battery, a big boat in tow, and a 200 mile drive home that doesnt pass a charging station.
This allows for both consumption of petroleum and advancements in vehicle tech. Could you imagine the torque and acceleration of an ev with the reliability of a regular engine running in its most efficient state.Drill baby drill....
Thanks, but I really dont understand if or how thats relevant to my question. If its great technology, Im all for it. My question is if and how and to what degree it is limiting given my specific use and location. Electric-only isnt viable for my use. Id like to understand what the implications are for me and my use during a trip where the electric portion of the vehicles function isnt there. Whats my new range towing over a mountain range, is the tank big enough to handle that, etc. i dont know if it simply becomes a gas vehicle at that point, or if there are limitations by virtue of the electric component.Diesel electric trains work the same way as this vehicle is intended to work. Run a generator at its most efficient rpm. To power a motor that charges a battery and runs an electric motor. Most trains use this means of power. So do older submarines.
I have heard some of the gain for a generator/motor configuration is it allows the engine to run a more efficient cycle. That cycle doesn’t work well for variable speed and load, but can be ok with a generator. The problem with a generator and motor configuration is the generator has to make all the power needed for the motor. You can’t have a simple 15kw generator and battery to run your truck down the road. In theory it may work, but in practice you quickly deplete the battery and the generator can’t keep up, which limits speed/power. BMW with range extender is a perfect example of this. Would only do 45-50 after the battery was down.@Bluefish points out the physics of it. EV motors are efficient enough....but when you add the mass of the battery needed- in some cases making sedans 5,600#, that kills their efficiency and range.
Toyota has found that happy medium, my kids Rav 4 gets 37mpg.
What's crazy to me is how they strangle these very efficient motors with so much emissions crap- they end up using more fuel....which is counter productive.
If my truck gets another 8 MPG, thats less fuel it's burning and less emissions. Not only that, but these motors would be less complex, easier to maintain and work on and less expensive.
But of course, when the Green Initiative folks from Government get involved....they always muck it up.
600 highway miles? or city ?I have a '22 F150 hybrid. Range is about 650 miles in the summer, 600 in the winter.
If I understand it right this is the same process a train uses. And trains tow pretty well. And they dont stop to plug in and charge.I also seriously question how anything electric handles towing.
Any idea on that with regard to post #29 above? I know zero about the technology so am curious about how it’ll work for the application.If I understand it right this is the same process a train uses. And trains tow pretty well. And they dont stop to plug in and charge.
I dont know how they work exactly but am curious to find out.Any idea on that with regard to post #29 above? I know zero about the technology so am curious about how it’ll work for the application.